Rush Limbaugh on Wednesday said Republicans failed to show a unified strategy during Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius’s hearing on the botched Obamacare rollout as he slammed the party for showcasing the “pervasive attitude” that “they can’t win.”

“Republicans had a chance here to try to convince people, ‘We don’t want this. We have to find a way to get rid of it. It’s hurting too many people,’ whatever — and if the people watching do not have as a takeaway that we want to get rid of this, then no damage done, right?” he said, according to a transcript. “That’s my take on it. You might say the Republicans don’t want to win.”

“There is a pervasive attitude in the Republican Party right now that they can’t win,” he added. “They don’t think they can win because of the media, they don’t think they can win because of whatever — and if they don’t think they can win, they’re not gonna try to.”

And Limbaugh told his listeners that what he saw when he watched parts of the hearing “alarmed me a little bit” because it “didn’t seem to me that the Republicans were organized or prepared and the Democrats are.”

Sure, Limbaugh said, he agreed with the emails he’s been getting that that said, “Boy, this Sebelius. Oh, is she looking bad. Oh, my God, it’s embarrassing. Oh, jeez, how stupid” — but he also came away from the hearing focused more on what he saw as the failure by Republicans in the room.

“And my friends, I’m sorry, but I have a different take,” he said on his radio show. “I mean, she does look all that, but are there any Republicans there? There are? Really? I haven’t seen any evidence of it. There’s some Republicans at that hearing? Really? They’ve got a purpose? They’ve got a strategy? Is that right? Really?”

While Democrats are “constantly, always moving their agenda forward” and are “always on the attack,” Republicans are failing to use their “gold mine here.”

“It’s like there’s still a fear of going after Obama, or going after Sebelius, just from the consultant level of the party or whoever’s running the Republican Party,” he said. “There seems to be some instruction that’s gone out from on high to back off. ‘Don’t even get close to making it look like it’s personal! Don’t be mean!’ I’m at a loss. Well, no. I’m not at a loss to understand it. I know exactly what’s going on. There is no Republican ideology is what is going on.”